Carter v. United Novelty & Premium Co.

132 A.2d 202, 389 Pa. 198, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 367
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 27, 1957
DocketAppeal, No. 239
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 132 A.2d 202 (Carter v. United Novelty & Premium Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. United Novelty & Premium Co., 132 A.2d 202, 389 Pa. 198, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 367 (Pa. 1957).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Jones,

On the morning of January 17, 1953, Arthur Lee Lane was fatally injured in an elevator accident in a business building at 425 Market Street, Philadelphia. His mother, Nettie Lane Carter, as administratrix of his estate, instituted survival and wrongful death actions for damages against the owner of the building, United Novelty & Premium Co. The owner of the building, which was four stories in height, utilized the first floor as a sales room and the third and fourth floors for storage. The second floor was leased to and in the possession of Levinthal Bros., Inc., the deceased’s employer, which company the defendant-owner brought upon the record as an additional defendant. At trial the jury returned verdicts for the plaintiff against both defendants jointly in the sum of $15,000 in the survival action and $2,500 in the wrongful death action. The original defendant filed motions for a new trial and for judgments n.o.v. while the additional defendant moved only for judgments n.o.v. The motion for a new trial was withdrawn at bar, and, after argument, the court en banc granted the n.o.v. motions of both defendants and entered judgments in their favor. The plaintiff brings this appeal from the judgment for the original defendant.

The accident which caused Lane’s death ivas unwitnessed. Consequently, the plaintiff’s case rests necessarily upon circumstantial evidence. The sole question raised by this appeal is as to the sufficiency of the evidence adduced at trial to carry the case to the jury on the question of liability.

Viewing the evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, as the jury’s verdicts require, it appears that, on the [201]*201morning of the fatal accident, Lane had been working Avith Sidney Levinthal, a representative of the lessee company, bringing freight from the first floor of the building to the second floor by means of an elevator. It Avas about tAventy minutes before the accident Avas discovered Avhen Levinthal had first missed Lane. The latter’s stepfather, Avho Avas employed in a parking lot across the street from the first floor outside entrance to the elevator, testified that Lane had visited him about the time just indicated. When Levinthal Avent to look for Lane he found his body caught and crushed between the elevator car and the second floor gate at the third floor landing Avith his legs dangling in the elevator shaft. Ilis head, Avhich was facing toward the interior of the elevator car, and shoulders Avere above the floor of the car with his arms resting on the car floor. He was pronounced dead upon arrival at the hospital to which he Avas immediately removed after his body had been extricated by a rescue unit of the Philadelphia Fire Department.

The car of the elevator Avas so constructed as to admit of access thereto from two sides and so could be directly entered from the street outside, as well as from within the building, Avhen the elevator was at the ground floor. The open side of the elevator toward the exterior Avail of the building Avas protected by a folding gate which Avas equipped with an electric interlock —a device Avhich automatically barred operation of the car unless the gate Avas closed. The side of the elevator car from which access to the various floors of the building could be had Avas open but the opening Avas guarded, at each floor by vertically rising counterbalanced wooden slatted gates Avhich operated up and down on slides located Avithin the shaft. These gates were equipped Avith electromechanical interlocks so designed mechanically as to insure against a gate’s being raised [202]*202unless the floor of the adjacent elevator car was within six inches of the building floor and, in any event, would electrically prevent or stop movement of the car, regardless of where it might be in the shaft, if a gate should be opened or left open on any floor.

Since the deceased was crushed between the floor of the elevator and the second floor gate up at the third floor landing, it is admitted, as indeed it must be, that the accident could not have happened had the interlock on the second floor gate been operating properly. This is self-evident from the fact that while the second floor gate, which was raised to the third floor landing, was obviously open, the crushing force of the elevator car was then being applied to the deceased’s body whereas had the interlock on the second floor gate been functioning, as it should have been, the elevator could not have moved for a greater range than six inches above and below the second floor. So much is conceded by all parties to the record.

The defendant’s failure to maintain the interlock properly constitutes the negligence alleged as the cause of the death of the plaintiff’s decedent. In its complaint against the additional defendant, the defendant-owner alleged that it was the negligence of the tenant, Levinthal Bros., Inc., in rendering the interlock inoperative that caused the fatal injury to the deceased. And, in its answer to the plaintiff’s complaint, the original defendant admitted its ownership of the building, its own occupancy of a part of the building and averred that, by the terms of its lease to the additional defendant, all tenants and occupiers of the building had the right in common to the use of the freight elevator. The rule as to the extent of the owner’s liability in such circumstances was stated in Sloan v. Hirsch, 283 Pa. 230, 233, 128 A. 831, as follows: “'Where premises are let to several tenants, each occupying dif[203]*203ferent portions, but all enjoying or using certain portions in common, such as [elevators] . . . the landlord is held to be in control, and owes, not only to Ms tenants, but to those lawfully on the premises as the servants ... of the tenants the duty to exercise reasonable care and diligence to keep such parts in safe condition, and for failure to do this he is liable to such servants . . . injured in consequence of his negligence. . . .’ ” See, also, Annotation, 19 A.L.R. 2d 272.

The plaintiff’s evidence established that the interlock at the second floor gate had been “plugged”, i.e., rendered inoperative by the insertion of some foreign substance between the contacts of the electric switch on at least two occasions prior to the accident in suit. Thus, on October 3, 1952, in the course of the regular semi-annual official inspection of the elevator and, again on January 6, 1953 (just eleven days before the accident), upon a re-inspection, the inspector found the interlock “plugged”. Both times he removed the “plugs” and, following the October 3rd inspection, made a formal report of the dangerous condition to the Department of Labor and Industry which, in turn, notified the defendant-owner of the situation. The inspector also notified an officer of the defendant company of the existence of the “plugs” in the interlock. The manager of the additional defendant’s business testified that both he and members of his company had “plugged” the interlock device at different times. The decedent had never operated the elevator alone nor was he permitted to do so, and it did not appear that he knew how to “plug” the interlock. It was further established that employees of the defendant company used the elevator frequently to transport materials from the first floor sales room to the storage rooms on the third and fourth floors, and vice versa, and that, if the second floor gate were left open and the addi-' [204]*204tional defendant’s premises closed, no one conld nse the elevator if the interlock was in proper working order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 A.2d 202, 389 Pa. 198, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-united-novelty-premium-co-pa-1957.